Identifiant
S'enregistrer
FR
AT
Austria
DE
Germany
FR
France
US
USA
EN
International
0
Licence d'utilisation des images
Liste des mots clés
Nos photographes
ArtShop
A propos de nous
Blog
Contact
Devenir contributeur
Image requests
Images
Astronomie Photos ❘ lookphotos
70269419 - Magic telescope, worlds largest IACT mirror telescope, Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescope, 17m Durchmesser, Observatorio Astrofisico, Astronomie, Astrophysik, Observatorium, Kuppel, Roque de los Muchachos, Caldera de Taburiente, Caldera de Taburiente
70387885 - Astronomie, Entfernt, Farbe, Galaxie, Horizontal, M101, Niemand, Schmuckkörbchen, Spiralgalaxie, Stern, Universum, Weltraum, Wissenschaft, S98-898244, AGEFOTOSTOCK
71472133 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky over the Baltic Sea, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
71472131 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky over the Baltic Sea, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
71471931 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, Dalarna, Sweden
71471928 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, Dalarna, Sweden
14276045 - Starry night sky featuring the Milky Way over the calm Atlantic Ocean at Isla Canela Beach, Ayamonte, Spain.
14249391 - A framing of the Carina Nebula below and the colourful double star, Chi (or ??) Velorum (in Vela) above. The Gem Cluster, NGC 3293, is also resolved at the upper right of the nebula.
14249380 - This frames the rich region of the southern Milky Way in the small constellations of Norma (at centre) and Ara (at left and extending to the top). The bright Norma Starcloud is at bottom with the rich star cluster NGC 6067 ermbedded in it. The large red nebula at top is NGC 6188, aka RCW 108, that surrounds a loose star cluster NGC 6193. The nebula has become known as the Fighting Dragons of Ara, from its apperance in close-up images. To the right of the large nebula is the small double-lobed planetary nebula NGC 6164, though it is tiny at this image scale.
14249351 - This is a 360° panorama of the May 10/11, 2024 great aurora display, when the Kp Index reached 8 this night bringing aurora to as far south as the southern U.S. Here, from my home in southern Alberta, Canada (latitude 51° N) it is exhibiting very odd vertical blue and magenta rays across the western (left), northern (bottom), and eastern (right) sky, and an odder bright patch to the south at top. This was toward the end of the main activity of the show for me this night, at about 2:30 am. These distinctive blue rays appeared like this only at this time after the main show died down. The colour
14249328 - This is the complex of nebulosity around the star Gamma Cygni, aka Sadr, in central Cygnus, and labeled IC 1318 or the Butterfly Nebula. The star cluster NGC 6910 is at top centre. The dark dust lane cutting through the nebula is catalogued as Lynds Dark Nebula 889.
14249316 - This frames two contrasting nebulas on the border of Canis Major and Monoceros. At top is the large Seagull Nebula or IC 2177, an area of mostly red hydrogen-alpha emission and is a region of star formation, though it contains some blue reflection nebulas.
14249247 - This is a wide-field view of the April 8, 2024 total eclipse of the Sun, taking in the bright planets Jupiter (at top) and Venus (below) that were easily visible to the unaided eye during totality. Here the Sun appears only as its outer atmosphere, the corona, in shades of yellow and blue, surrounding the dark disk of the Moon.
14249184 - This is a portrait of the dust-filled region of sky in Taurus that frames the Hyades star cluster (at bottom) with bright yellow Aldebaran, up to the blue Pleiades star cluster (M45) at top. At left are the dense, dark brown Taurus Molecular Clouds catalogued by E.E. Barnard in the early 20th century with various B numbers such as B209 and B19.
14249107 - This frames the small constellations of Sagitta the Arrow (at bottom) and Vulpecula the Fox (at top), to include a number of deep-sky objects in a wide field of view similar to that of binoculars.
14249105 - This is the total eclipse of the Sun of April 8, 2024, in a blend of two exposures to display all the fiery pink prominences that were visible during totality around the lunar disk in one image, set against the bright inner corona of the Sun with the dark disk of the Moon in silhouette in front of the Sun.
14249087 - This is the reflection nebula called the Witch Head Nebula, but officially IC 2118 (also with the catalogue number NGC 1909), near the very bright star Rigel, at lower left in Orion. But the nebula is over the border in Eridanus the River. Hot blue-white Rigel is the source of illumination lighting this dusty nebula. Some faint magenta emission nebulosity also populates the field in Orion.
14249071 - The galactic core area of the Milky Way Galaxy in Sagittarius and Scorpius rising in the east at left, with the spectacular southern reaches of the Milky Way from Centaurus to Carina above high in the south. The Dark Emu made of dark dust lanes in the Milky Way is fully visible here. Scorpius is rising on its side at left, while the Southern Cross is high in the south at upper right.
14249052 - This is the nebula-rich region of Monoceros the Unicorn, containing the bright Rosette Nebula, NGC 2237, below the fainter and larger complex of nebulosity, NGC 2264, which contains the small (on this scale) Cone Nebula.
14249010 - This frames the Australian aboriginal "Dark Emu" made of dark dust lanes in the Milky Way as it rises in the east. The spectacular southern reaches of the Milky Way from Centaurus to Carina shine above high in the south, including the Southern Cross. The dark Coal Sack beside the Cross is the head of the Emu. Her neck is the dark lane that splits the Milky Way starting at the star Alpha Centauri and extending down and into Scorpius, here rising above the trees.
14248970 - This is a portrait of the complex of nebulas in Centaurus and Carina in the southernmost portion of the Milky Way.
14248924 - This is a showpiece of the southern skies, the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of our Milky Way and one rich in star forming nebulas and clusters.
14248832 - This frames the asterism called the False Cross, made of stars in Vela at top and Carina at right.
14248791 - An outburst of a substorm during the great May 10, 2024 display of Northern Lights, here creating an overhead corona with rays converging to the magnetic zenith (south of the true zenith), and amid clouds. Arcturus is below the zenith. The constellation of Corona Borealis (fittingly!) is left of the convergence point.
14248782 - This is the pair of contrasting star clusters in Puppis: the richly populated Messier 46 on the left and the sparser but brighter Messier 47 on the right. M46 has embedded in it the small green planetary nebula, NGC 2438, just visible here at this scale.
14248732 - This is a wide-angle view of the well-known constellations of the northern hemisphere winter season, but seen here from the southern hemisphere looking north from latitude 31° S on an austral autumn night, March 3, 2024.
14248702 - This is the superb Small Magellanic Cloud, a member of the Local Group, and a satellite galaxy of our Milky Way.
14248685 - This is a single exposure of the end of totality (Third Contact or C3) of the April 8, 2024 total eclipse of the Sun. It shows the numerous pink prominences along that limb of the Sun and shows the first burst of light from the Sun's photosphere shining through a lunar valley or crater. The bright inner corona also shows up even at this short single exposure. High cirrus clouds added some glow to the diamond ring burst.
14248657 - This is a panorama of a dim but colourful aurora with red curtains obvious to the camera as well as green fragments and tints of yellow, arcing across the northern sky.
14248603 - The waxing crescent Moon near Jupiter on the evening of March 14, 2024, setting into the western twilight sky on an austral autumn evening. The Moon is in thin cloud adding the colourful lunar "corona" around it from diffraction from the cloud's water droplets. Earthshine is visible on the "dark side of the Moon."
14248577 - A lone meteor from the 2023 Geminid meteor shower streaks away from the radiant point in Gemini below centre amid the red aurora, with the meteor in Auriga and above Orion rising at lower right. An aurora brightens the northern sky at left, with a broad green lower curtain and red upper curtain.
14220209 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14220183 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14220151 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219995 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219988 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219908 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219800 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219420 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14129425 - Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) over Lake Inari, Lapland, Finland
14127184 - Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) over Lake Inari, Lapland, Finland
14127125 - Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) over VisitInari wood cabins in Lake Inari, Lapland, Finland
71471930 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, Dalarna, Sweden
71471929 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, Dalarna, Sweden
71471926 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, Dalarna, Sweden
71471924 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, Dalarna, Sweden
71469950 - An old sundial in the Jolfa Square in the Armenian neighborhood of Isfahan, Iran.
71459316 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, winter, Iceland
71459315 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, winter, Iceland
71459313 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, winter, Iceland
71459311 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, winter, Iceland
71450564 - Astronomical clock Marienkirche, Rostock, Baltic coast, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany
14275562 - Scenic view of a starry night sky over a wooden boardwalk surrounded by lush dunes in Isla Canela, Ayamonte, Spain.
14249468 - This is a 360° panorama of the May 10/11, 2024 great aurora display, when the Kp Index reached 8 this night bringing aurora to as far south as the southern U.S. Here, from my home in southern Alberta, Canada (latitude 51° N) it is exhibiting very odd vertical blue and magenta rays across the western (left), and northern and eastern sky (centre), and an odder bright patch to the south at far right. This was toward the end of the main activity of the show for me this night, at about 2:30 am. These distinctive blue rays appeared like this only at this time after the main show died down. The colou
14249407 - Thiis is a panorama of Orion and the winter stars setting into the evening twilight spring sky on April 19, 2024, in their last evening's appearance for the year.
14249388 - The large loose open star cluster in Taurus near the Hyades, and a good binocular object. A number of small, faint galaxies from the UGC and PGC catalogues are also in the field.
14249372 - A panorama of weak Kp1-level auroral arcs in the moonlight, on February 15, 2024, from the deck of the Churchill Northern Studies Centre, Manitoba. This is an example of the kind of low-level aurora that is almost always present at locations like Churchill under the main auroral oval. The northerly lower arc did not appear until close to midnight, as is typical for weak displays. It was then joined by the broad dim arc at centre reaching overhead. Note the dark streaks in the wide arc.
14249370 - A selfie of me watching the great aurora display of May 10/11, 2024, when the Kp Index reached 8 this night and auroras were seen in the southern U.S. However, this was from home in southern Alberta at latitude 51° N.
14249309 - This is the large and bright globular star cluster NGC 6397 in Ara below Scorpius and just south of the Milky Way.
14249270 - This is a portrait of the dust-filled region of sky from Perseus down to Taurus that includes the pink California Nebula (NGC 1499) at top down to the Pleiades star cluster (M45) at bottom.
14249258 - This mosaic or panorama frames the rich region of the southern Milky Way in the small constellations of Norma (on the right) and Ara (on the left) in the Milky Way south of Scorpius.
14249218 - This frames the variety of bright nebulas and dark dust clouds in and around the Belt and Sword of Orion.
14249212 - This frames a selection of nebulas and star clusters in Puppis in a wide 15º by 10º field of view. At centre is the pair of contrasting and superb star clusters: rich NGC 2477 on the left and sparse but bright NGC 2451 on the right, centred on the orange star c Puppis.
14249188 - This is a panorama of a substorm outburst during the great May 10, 2024 display of Northern Lights, here creating an overhead corona with rays converging to the magnetic zenith (south of the true zenith), and amid clouds. The rays show a rich mix of oxygen greens and reds, as well as nitrogen blues blending to create purples. Some green and red are mixing to make yellows.
14249148 - A panorama of the landscape and sky just as the Sun sets over Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park (Áísínai'pi) in Alberta, with the Milk River below winding amid the sandstone rock formations, and the Sweetgrass Hills in the distance in Montana.
14249139 - This is a portrait of Orion the Hunter with exposures and processing to emphasize the complex and colourful array of bright and dark nebulas within its boundaries.
14249115 - This is a 200° panorama of the arch of the northern Milky Way rising over the Badlands landscape of Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta. This was the night of May 31/June 1, 2024, when from this latitude of 50° 45' N the sky is not fully dark even in the middle of the night, here at about 1:30 a.m. MDT. So the sky retains a blue tint, especially to the north at left.
14249106 - The pair of small open star clusters in northern Orion: NGC 2194 at lower left, a rich cluster, and NGC 2169 at upper right, a loose cluster but with stars arranged in two groups making it look like a number 37 or an XY letter pair. The small red nebula at left above NGC 2194 is Sharpless 2-269.
14249023 - This is the bright, large and colourful naked-eye star cluster NGC 2516 in Carina, aka the Southern Beehive Cluster, near the bright star Avior (Epsilon Carinae) in Carina, the bottom star of the False Cross asterism.
14248996 - This is Messier 1, the first entry in Charles Messier's 18th century catalogue of deep-sky objects that were not to be mistaken for comets, his real quest. It is also NGC 1952, or the Crab Nebula, from the Earl of Rosse's 19th century description and naming. It is north of the lower horn of Taurus the Bull. This is a remnant cloud of debris expanding away from a supernova explosion that was witnessed in 1054 CE. All that's left of the progeniitor star now is a neutron star forming a spinning pulsar at the heart of the explosion debris. Some red H-alpha tendrils are obvious around the extremity
14248894 - This is a portrait of a field in the "club" of Orion the Hunter, in northern Orion, that contains the emission nebula (at top) catalogued as Sharpless 2-262, or LBN 863, but known popularly as Lower's Nebula for its discovery in 1939 by the father and son team of Harold and Charles Lower. Below it just right of centre is the small, loose star cluster NGC 2169, with its stars arranged in a number 37 or XY pattern. It is sometimes called the Number 37 Cluster. At lower left is the rich star cluster NGC 2194. The small red nebula above NGC 2194 is Sharpless 2-269, with faint Sh2-267 above it. A r
14248861 - This frames the region of the Milky Way in southern Canis Major and northern Puppis, rich in a variety of star clusters and some nebulosity. The field of view is 15º by 10º.
14248841 - This is a wide-angle view of the southern Milky Way, here from Carina and Crux at lower left up to Orion and Monoceros at upper right. This was shot from latitude 31° S on an austral autumn night, March 3, 2024.
14248797 - This fish-eye lens view takes in the southern Milky Way, from Scorpius rising at lower left in the east (though partly behind trees here), to Orion setting at upper right in the west. At centre are the bright starclouds of Carina and Centaurus, along with the Southern Cross, Crux, and the dark Coal Sack. To the left of the Coal Sack are the stars Alpha and Beta Centauri, the Pointers.
14248776 - This was the view as a multi-colored curtain of aurora formed to the south in my sky during the great display of Northern Lights on May 10, 2024. The Kp Index peaked at 8 this night bringing the aurora borealis and australis to wide areas of the planet including the tropics. This was from home in southern Alberta at latitude 51° North, where the aurora filled the sky but, as here, was often best and brightest to the south. The colours come from oxygen, nitrogen and sunlight creating the shades of green, red, pink, and blue.
14248674 - This is the Large Magellanic Cloud, the main Local Group member and a satellite galaxy of our Milky Way, some 160,000 light years away, It is visible only from the southern hemisphere. Nowhere else in the sky do we see such a profuse collection of star-forming nebulas as here in this frame the width typical of binocular fields, about 7.5° by 5º.
14248638 - The rising Full Moon of April 23, 2024, with the April Full Moon called popularly the "Pink" Moon or the Frog Croaking Moon.
14248605 - This is a portrait of the constellation of Auriga the Charioteer, with exposures and processing to bring out the bright and faint nebulosity within the constellation, as well as show its prominent star clusters.
14248595 - There's no more colorful area of the deep-sky than this field in the head of Scorpius. A mix of red and magenta emission nebulas combine with blue reflection nebulas, and unique to this field, a yellow reflection nebula around the red giant star Antares at bottom. Dark dust lanes glow brown and yellow as well.
14248584 - This is a framing of most of the constellation of Taurus the Bull, with exposures and processing to emphasize the dim and dark clouds of interstellar dust within its boundaries.
14219930 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219814 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219640 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219566 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219565 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219514 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219437 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14219367 - Solar eclipse of April 8 2024, Nazas, Mexico
14127183 - Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) over VisitInari wood cabins in Lake Inari, Lapland, Finland
71472081 - Northern lights at Hemmelsdorfer See, autumn, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
71459317 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, winter, Iceland
71459314 - Northern lights, Aurora borealis, in the night sky, winter, Iceland
14249363 - This panorama takes in a roughly 180° sweep of the Milky Way:
14249240 - This is a telescopic close-up of the eclipsed Sun at the April 8, 2024 total solar eclipse, with the Sun's intricate atmosphere, the corona, surrounding the dark silhouetted disk of the Moon.
14249201 - This is a framing of the vast Gum Nebula in the southern Milky Way, that sprawls over the constellations of Vela and Puppis. It is listed as object #12 in the catalog of southern nebulas compiled in the 1950s by Australian astronomer Colin Gum. It is perhaps a supernova remnant (not to be confused with the smaller Vela Supernova Remnant that is within the Gum Nebula) or is a large and old H-Alpha star-forming region. It is nearby in the Milky Way, at about 1500 light years from us. Smaller components of it carry other catalogue numbers such as Gum 15 and Gum 17.
14249121 - This is a fish-eye view of the centre of the Galaxy region in Sagittarius and Scorpius nearly overhead before dawn on an austral autumn morning in March 2024. The Milky Way stretches from Aquila at bottom left to Crux and Carina at upper right.
14249114 - This is the large Vela Supernova Remnant – visible here as the mostly cyan wisps and strands of starstuff from a star that exploded about 11,000 years ago when it was about 900 light years away. It would have been a spectacular sight in our sky at that time.
14249097 - This is a 300º panorama of the May 10/11, 2024 great aurora display, when the Kp Index reached 8 this night bringing aurora to as far south as the southern U.S. Here, from my home in rural southern Alberta, Canada (latitude 51° N) we saw curtains strongly colored green and red from oxygen, but also pink and blue from nitrogen, with the latter colors unusually strong with pinks visible to the naked eye and purples and blues to the camera.
14249090 - This frames the famous Pleiades or Seven Sisters star cluster (aka Messier or M45) set amid a dusty starfield in Taurus. The blue stars of the Pleiades are surrounded by bright blue reflection nebulosity, most prominent below the lower star Merope, a bit of nebula catalogued separately as NGC 1435. The odd horizontal spike above Merope is real and is catalogued as van den Bergh 20.
page suivante